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Post by garbulky on Oct 25, 2017 18:26:31 GMT -5
A subwoofer crawl could go a long way in smoothing out some room anomalies. It would be simpler than what you've been trying. A dolly, a couch and just a little time. You wouldn't even need any of the software. Just play a youtube video of a frequency sweep.
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Post by pknaz on Oct 25, 2017 18:53:19 GMT -5
Of course the best solution is to not use a software based room analyzer... nor a software-based EQ. Oh, and perhaps hire a professional? Isn't this exactly what Dirac is?
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Post by pknaz on Oct 25, 2017 18:54:30 GMT -5
You can export REW curves directly to the XMC, there is a thread here on these boards about doing just that. Once the XMC curves are set, you can re-run REW to see the results of your EQ adjustments.
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DYohn
Emo VIPs
Posts: 18,493
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Post by DYohn on Oct 25, 2017 18:59:32 GMT -5
Of course the best solution is to not use a software based room analyzer... nor a software-based EQ. Oh, and perhaps hire a professional? Isn't this exactly what Dirac is? digital EQ? Yes, it is.
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Post by foggy1956 on Oct 25, 2017 19:13:07 GMT -5
You can export REW curves directly to the XMC, there is a thread here on these boards about doing just that. Once the XMC curves are set, you can re-run REW to see the results of your EQ adjustments. Boom no gots xmc thingy😂
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Post by Gary Cook on Oct 25, 2017 19:45:31 GMT -5
OMG - this fuzzball continues to grow. Now I need REW and FuzzMeasure and they have to synchronize? I'm sorry, but why do they HAVE to synchronise? Don't you just run a frequency sweep (output) and look at the results, why is there a need for synchronisation? Sure it's necessary for time alignment, but not for just checking the db at the various frequency steps. That's what we did in the "old days", stick a CD in with a frequency sweep loaded onto it and then listen with a microphone plugged into a lap top and some software that recorded the output. Before CD's (the really "old days") I used to use a Cardas Audio Frequency Sweep and Burn-In vinyl, it was 33 rpm on one side and 45 rpm on the other. With a noise metre, a pencil and a piece of paper, that's old school analogue Cheers Gary
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